lol
ok then, I think that creating study guides is a great idea. In terms of collaboration, we could follow wikibooks method of free-editing. One useful aspect of wikibooks is that it contains a history page, that shows who made what changes and when, so if you think that the changes aren't warranted then the document can be returned to its original state.
I work on the egyptian section of a wikibooks project on ancient civilizations and this is the method we use.

here's a link to the page so you can see what I'm talking about. (notice also how the document is split into sections.)

there are tabs at the top for history, discussion on the progress of the document, etc.

We could just create the studyguides on wikibooks and put the appropriate link in the tutorial article. The wiki site is usually pretty reliable unless they have a major power outage so we wouldn't have to worry about broken links.

The system and infrastructure is there for us to utilize.

But this is all speculation and suggestion, so if you don't totally agree, then we could do something else.

"I know how exciting pillaging is," the giant said fondly, ruffling Jack's hair. "No matter how much you're tempted, just say no."
"Just say no to pillaging. You got it."

I think we can do it here... Since Tyson has such a great server to host the site... Anyway, Mithril have you run this by Tyson? It sounds like a good idea. I am very busy this year but i will help out as much as i can...

"As a biologist, I firmly believe that when you're dead, you're dead. Except for what you live behind in history. That's the only afterlife" - J. Craig Venter